Sunday, July 27, 2008

10 Ways To Beat The Stock Market This Week!



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Put another stock market roller coaster ride of a week in the books. What started as a potentially strong week for stocks, particularly the struggling financial sector on a decent Bank of America report, and government bailout news for mortgage giants Fannie and Freddie. A sharp pullback in the previously gravity free commodities certainly didn’t hurt anything either. But around mid-day Wednesday that all changed. We saw a peak and rollover of the financials and with it went the market.

Friday, and I will preface this with the fact that Fridays of late have been pretty horrific – I forget the exact number but it was something to the effect of since the bear market has started we have lost around 19% on the S & P index, with 14% of the losses taking place on Fridays. So that said, although Fridays bounce back was low volume and otherwise pretty lackluster, it could have been much worse given the condition of the market on Thursday.

From where we’re sitting here it appears the market, and financial stock bounce that began last week and carried into the early part of this week, is over. Although oil and gold did not have particularly strong days to close out the week, other commodities such as coal did, and on all the technicals do suggest that we’re nearing the end of this pullback, at least for the time being. (Keep in mind the coming election and the fact that often times oil will go down into election season, which may trump the technical signals here.)


That said, two of the four major indexes that we track held pretty major support levels, so the early part of the week could very well see some chop before a full resumption of the downtrend occurs. The Dow is still holding that trendline that I’ve been yapping about for about a week now, as well as the 20 day simple moving average, while the Nasdaq composite is still holding onto the 10 day exponential. All share a mixed signal of being short term overbought but long term oversold, adding to our theory that we could see a bit of tug of war before the trend is resumed.

Let’s take a look at a few of these commodities and market indexes to try and get an overview of where we’re at:

The Dow on a daily chart is holding the trendline and the 20 as mentioned. We failed to break out of the January lows that were violated in late June and now acting as resistance.

We have stochastics rolling down from a short term overbought condition caused by last weeks’ rally. Friday saw a slight gain, but it was on very low volume, even for a summer Friday.

Looking at the dow again, this time on a weekly chart, we can see more of the same and a little different. Notice the inverse effect of the stochastics, crossing up from an oversold condition caused by the big drop since late May, at the 50 week simple moving average. The 2008 lows that were just mentioned as resistance are also converging with the 200 week simple moving average, making that area that much more powerful in terms of resistance.

The S & P by comparison, does not look as good as the Dow. Although we had actually broken out from the prior 2008 lows for a couple of days, Thursday sent it shooting down through and below, and Friday it failed to get above any support levels, so we are now looking at lots of resistance overhead. MACD and stochastics are also both pointing the way down on this chart.


The Nasdaq looks a little better than the other market averages, but by no means bullish. Volume Friday was again very low, we are still overbought on the daily chart, but are holding most support here.


The gold index bounced off its 100 day simple moving average on Wednesday and after a few retests looks like we have some solid support at the 917 level. We do also appear to have some resistance in the 935-940 range.


Oil has now pulled back to the same 100 ay simple moving average where gold found support. Stochastics on all time frames show a now oversold condition that may attract some new speculators who were afraid to buy in when it was so extended. Again, keep n mind that it is coming into election season.



We had a very nice week in terms of our portfolio stocks, watchlist stocks, and chatroom calls. We are down to only a few open positions after taking profits in a couple of longs and one short, also stopping out of a short at an even trade. Not bad for such a choppy, mixed up market. The volatility, while many continue to whine about it, continues to give us more than our fair share of great intraday and short term swing trades. Airlines, financials, and commodity plays have been trading in such big ranges that those able and willing to get on for the ride can and have made some phenomenal trades.

As mentioned this is most definitely a stock pickers market, which suits our fancy just fine. We are adding two new short plays to trigger and one long for Monday in the end of day portfolios, and have a few dozen of our favorite trading setups listed in the quick pix watchlists above. Enjoy the ride, and happy trading!


"Once we believe in ourselves, we can risk curiosity, wonder, spontaneous delight, or any experience that reveals the human spirit."

E E Cummings (1894 - 1962)

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